Donald
Trump has a 2 percentage point edge over Hillary Clinton in Florida,
according to a new poll released Wednesday, as both presidential
campaigns blanket the critical swing state in a full sprint to Election
Day.
A new Bloomberg Politics poll
finds Trump ahead of Clinton, 45% to 43% -- well within the poll's 3.2
percentage point margin of error -- in a four-way race among likely
voters. Libertarian Gary Johnson gets 4% support, and Green Party
candidate Jill Stein draws 2%. For perspective, President Barack Obama
won the state's 29 electoral votes in 2012 by less than a percentage
point.
That's a significant shift from Florida polling earlier this month, which regularly showed Clinton in the lead. A Quinnipiac University survey
-- taken after the the release of the "Access Hollywood" recording of
Trump and following the second presidential debate -- showed Clinton
leading by 4 percentage points, 48% to 44%.
Trump's
edge is driven by his advantage among Florida independents, among whom
he gets 44% compared to Clinton's 37%. Third-party candidates Johnson
and Stein combine for 14% of the independent vote.
Trump and Clinton rack up big advantages among their core constituencies in the new poll.
Trump
wins older voters (51%) and voters without a college degree (50%), and
is strongest in more conservative, rural areas and the state's northwest
panhandle.
Clinton wins Hispanics (51%) and voters
under 35 (49%), and has big leads among non-whites, and college-educated
voters. The Democrat also has a 30-point lead among Miami-area
residents.
Veteran pollster Ann
Selzer, who oversaw the poll, said that the poll "suggests Trump has
more opportunity in Florida than some think is realistic, given his poor
standing with Hispanics."
"But he
does well with groups that are key to winning there, including older,
more reliable voters," she added. "Clinton depends on younger voters and
a strong presence at the polls of black and non-Cuban Hispanics."
The
Bloomberg poll also surveyed the state's US Senate race between
incumbent Sen. Marco Rubio and his challenger, Democratic Rep. Patrick
Murphy.
The poll found Rubio with a
10-point lead, 51% to 41%. Murphy has consistently trailed Rubio in
most Florida senate polls despite high-profile support from the Clinton
campaign and its surrogates. The Democratic Senatorial Campaign
Committee pulled its television ad support for Murphy in mid-October. The Quinnipiac poll taken earlier in October showed a 2-point lead for Rubio.
The
Bloomberg Politics poll was conducted between October 21-24, and
surveyed 953 likely Florida voters. It has a margin of error of plus or
minus 3.2 percentage points.
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